Hepatic gene expression in flounder chronically exposed to multiply polluted estuarine sediment: Absence of classical exposure ‘biomarker’ signals and induction of inflammatory, innate immune and apoptotic pathways

The effects of chronic long term exposure to multiply-polluted environments on fish are not well understood, but environmental surveys suggest that such exposure may cause a variety of pathologies, including cancers. Transcriptomic profiling has recently been used to assess gene expression in Europe...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Aquatic Toxicology
Main Authors: Leaver, Michael, Diab, Amer, Boukouvala, Evridiki, Williams, Tim D, Chipman, James Kevin, Moffat, Colin F, Robinson, Craig D, George, Stephen
Other Authors: Institute of Aquaculture, National Agricultural Research Foundation, University of Birmingham, Scottish Government - Enterprise, Environment & Digital - Marine Scotland, orcid:0000-0002-3155-0844
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2010
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1893/2051
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquatox.2009.10.025
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0166445X
http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/2051/1/LeaverAqTox2009TextRevisedforSTORRE.pdf
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Summary:The effects of chronic long term exposure to multiply-polluted environments on fish are not well understood, but environmental surveys suggest that such exposure may cause a variety of pathologies, including cancers. Transcriptomic profiling has recently been used to assess gene expression in European flounder (Platichthys flesus) living in several polluted and clean estuaries. However, the gene expression changes detected were not unequivocally elicited by pollution, most likely due to the confounding effects of natural estuarine ecosystem variables. In this study flounder from an uncontaminated estuary were held on clean or polluted sediments in mesocosms, allowing control of variables such as salinity, temperature, and diet. After 7 months flounder were removed from each mesocosm and hepatocytes prepared from fish exposed to clean or polluted sediments. The hepatocytes were treated with benzo(a)pyrene (BAP), estradiol (E2), copper, a mixture of these three, or with the vehicle DMSO. A flounder cDNA microarray was then used to measure hepatocyte transcript abundance after each treatment. The results show that long term chronic exposure to a multiply-polluted sediment causes increases in the expression of mRNAs coding for proteins of the endogenous apoptotic program, of innate immunity and inflammation. Contrary to expectation, the expression of mRNAs which are commonly used as biomarkers of environmental exposure to particular contaminants were not changed, or were changed contrary to expectation. However, acute treatment of hepatocytes from flounder from both clean and polluted sediments with BAP or E2 caused the expected changes in the expression of these biomarkers. Thus transcriptomic analysis of flounder exposed long-term to chronic pollution causes a different pattern of gene expression than in fish acutely treated with single chemicals, and reveals novel potential biomarkers of environmental contaminant exposure. These novel biomarkers include Diablo, a gene involved in apoptotic pathways and highly ...